Remove 2006 Remove AWS Remove Cloud Remove Strategy
article thumbnail

Allez, rendez-vous à Paris – An AWS Region is coming to France!

All Things Distributed

Today, I am very excited to announce our plans to open a new AWS Region in France! Over the past 10 years, we have seen tremendous growth at AWS. As a result, we have opened 35 Availability Zones (AZs), across 13 AWS Regions worldwide. As a result, we have opened 35 Availability Zones (AZs), across 13 AWS Regions worldwide.

AWS 166
article thumbnail

Looking back at 10 years of compartmentalization at AWS

All Things Distributed

At AWS, we don't mark many anniversaries. But every year when March 14th comes around, it's a good reminder that Amazon S3 originally launched on Pi Day, March 14, 2006. A concept that has changed infrastructure architecture is now at the core of both AWS and customer reliability and operations. Regional isolation.

AWS 132
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For August 31st, 2018

High Scalability

And if you know anyone looking for a simple book that uses lots of pictures and lots of examples to explain the cloud, then please recommend my new book: Explain the Cloud Like I'm 10. Corey Quinn : Kubernetes is Named After the Greek God of Spending Money on Cloud Services. Woods and Hollnagel, 2006).

Internet 105
article thumbnail

Cloud computing in Europe should put power in the hands of the customer

All Things Distributed

This is the promise – and the reality – of cloud computing which is driving tremendous change in the technology industry and transforming how we do business in Europe and around the world. Cloud computing unlocks innovation within organisations of all types and sizes.

Cloud 123
article thumbnail

Jamstack CMS: The Past, The Present and The Future

Smashing Magazine

In addition, they introduced a hosted version of MovableType in 2003 called TypePad to compete with other popular cloud platforms. In 2006, Denis Defreyne tried to set up a Ruby-based blog platform and ran into performance problems — “Having a VPS with only 96 MB of RAM, any Ruby-based CMS ran extremely slowly.”

Ecommerce 139